
I see vim preinstalled more than nano (e.g. in container images). I’ve been trying to convert to micro, though. It has better support for terminal emulators than nano.

I see vim preinstalled more than nano (e.g. in container images). I’ve been trying to convert to micro, though. It has better support for terminal emulators than nano.

Why not just edit the YAML directly on the server via a command-line text editor or SSHFS and then push from there when it works?
Why GitLab and Gitea?

Why is a terminal emulator checking their account anyway? Who puts DRM on a terminal emulator besides Microsoft?

Or sometimes they are aware, but it’s enough cheaper that they don’t care.

Yeah, at least I actually do fix the old issues.
Also, Git for laws might not be the worst idea. Reverting Citizens United would be nice.
Or ham to hamster.

And almost no one writes it for fun.
Medium-well, more like.
Wrong documentation is still a pretty big problem, even without the gaslighting. Incomplete documentation is better than none; incorrect documentation is not.
I guarantee it’s already happened. The question is when a company large enough that you can’t avoid it follows suit.
And that’s what happens when you spend a trillion dollars on an autocomplete: amazing at making things look like whatever it’s imitating, but with zero understanding of why the original looked that way.
Bonus points for citing nonexistent court decisions.
That comes for free with using an LLM to make the argument.
I’m surprised you’ve managed to find a way to program that doesn’t work far better on Linux than on Windows. I ended up having to use WSL at work because Windows was so obnoxious (and they don’t allow anything else on the intranet).